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Article on Deliberative Accountability Rules

Shelly Kreiczer-LevyDr. Shelly Kreiczer-Levy (Assistant Professor, Academic Center of Law and Business) recently published an article entitled, Deliberate Accountability Rules in Inheritance Law: Promoting Accountable Estate Planning, 45 U. Mich. J.L. Reform No. 4 (2012). The abstract on SSRN is provided below:

In the last few decades, the emerging trend in trust and estate law has been a steady loosening of the limitations on testamentary freedom. The 1990 Uniform Probate Code pioneered some of these developments. Construction rules are no exception. It is widely accepted that testamentary construction rules should track the owner’s presumed intent. In this article, I argue that there is also room, alongside these intent-furthering rules, for intent-defeating rules in inheritance law. A property owner lacks incentives to internalize the relational, familial, or economic effects of her allocation. Such rules, termed deliberative accountability rules, are therefore designed to foster accountability in estate planning. These rules burden the owner with requirements to think her decision through, and to give reasons for and face the relational consequences of her act. These rules work to counterbalance the freedom of the owner by requiring her to make an informed decision.